Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

184617 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 2764, results 69076 - 69100

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Vertical hydraulic conductivity measurements in the Denver Basin, Colorado
P.E. Barkmann
2004, Mountain Geologist (41) 169-183
The Denver Basin is a structural basin on the eastern flank of the Rocky Mountain Front Range, Colorado, containing approximately 3000 ft of sediments that hold a critical groundwater resource supplying many thousands of households with water. Managing this groundwater resource requires understanding how water gets into and moves through...
Spatially quantitative seafloor habitat mapping: Example from the northern South Carolina inner continental shelf
G.Y. Ojeda, P. T. Gayes, R. F. Van Dolah, W. C. Schwab
2004, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (59) 399-416
Naturally occurring hard bottom areas provide the geological substrate that can support diverse assemblages of sessile benthic organisms, which in turn, attract many reef-dwelling fish species. Alternatively, defining the location and extent of bottom sand bodies is relevant for potential nourishment projects as well as to ensure that transient sediment...
Roosevelt elk density and social segregation: Foraging behavior and females avoiding larger groups of males
F. Weckerly, K. McFarland, M. Ricca, K. Meyer
2004, American Midland Naturalist (152) 386-399
Intersexual social segregation at small spatial scales is prevalent in ruminants that are sexually dimorphic in body size. Explaining social segregation, however, from hypotheses of how intersexual size differences affects the foraging process of males and females has had mixed results. We studied whether body size influences on forage behavior,...
Timing of Precambrian melt depletion and Phanerozoic refertilization events in the lithospheric mantle of the Wyoming Craton and adjacent Central Plains Orogen
R. W. Carlson, A.J. Irving, D.J. Schulze, B. C. Hearn Jr.
2004, LITHOS (77) 453-472
Garnet peridotite xenoliths from the Sloan kimberlite (Colorado) are variably depleted in their major magmaphile (Ca, Al) element compositions with whole rock Re-depletion model ages generally consistent with this depletion occurring in the mid-Proterozoic. Unlike many lithospheric peridotites, the Sloan samples are also depleted in incompatible trace elements, as shown...
Great earthquakes and tsunamis of the past 2000 years at the Salmon River estuary, central Oregon coast, USA
A.R. Nelson, A.C. Asquith, W.C. Grant
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 1276-1292
Four buried tidal marsh soils at a protected inlet near the mouth of the Salmon River yield definitive to equivocal evidence for coseismic subsidence and burial by tsunami-deposited sand during great earthquakes at the Cascadia subduction zone. An extensive, landward-tapering sheet of sand overlies a peaty tidal-marsh soil over much...
Relations between land use and organochlorine pesticides, PCBs, and semi-volatile organic compounds in streambed sediment and fish on the island of Oahu, Hawaii
A.M.D. Brasher, R.H. Wolff
2004, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (46) 385-398
Bed-sediment and/or fish samples were collected from 27 sites around the island of Oahu (representing urban, agricultural, mixed, and forested land use) to determine the occurrence and distribution of hydrophobic organic compounds including organochlorine pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs). Of the 28 organochlorine compounds analyzed in...
Effects of invasive alien plants on fire regimes
M.L. Brooks, C. M. D’Antonio, D.M. Richardson, J.M. DiTomaso, J.B. Grace, R.J. Hobbs, Jon E. Keeley, M. Pellant, D. Pyke
2004, BioScience (54) 677-688
Plant invasions are widely recognized as significant threats to biodiversity conservation worldwide. One way invasions can affect native ecosystems is by changing fuel properties, which can in turn affect fire behavior and, ultimately, alter fire regime characteristics such as frequency, intensity, extent, type, and seasonality of fire. If the regime...
Is climate change affecting wolf populations in the high arctic?
L. David Mech
2004, Climatic Change (67) 86-93
Gobal climate change may affect wolves in Canada’s High Arctic (80° N) acting through three trophic levels (vegetation, herbivores, and wolves). A wolf pack dependent on muskoxen and arctic hares in the Eureka area of Ellesmere Island denned and produced pups most years from at least 1986 through 1997. However,...
Land use change and terrestrial carbon stocks in Senegal
P.L. Woomer, L.L. Tieszen, G. Tappan, A. Toure, M. Sall
2004, Journal of Arid Environments (59) 625-642
Environmental degradation resulting from long-term drought and land use change has affected terrestrial carbon (C) stocks within Africa's Sahel. We estimated Senegal's terrestrial carbon stocks in 1965, 1985, and 2000 using an inventory procedure involving satellite images revealing historical land use change, and recent field measurements of standing carbon stocks...
Visual enhancement of unmixed multispectral imagery using adaptive smoothing
G.P. Lemeshewsky
Z.-U. Rahman, R.A. Schowengerdt, S.E. Reichenbach, editor(s)
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Adaptive smoothing (AS) has been previously proposed as a method to smooth uniform regions of an image, retain contrast edges, and enhance edge boundaries. The method is an implementation of the anisotropic diffusion process which results in a gray scale image. This paper discusses modifications to the AS method for...
Estimating tectonic history through basin simulation-enhanced seismic inversion: Geoinformatics for sedimentary basins
K. Tandon, K. Tuncay, K. Hubbard, J. Comer, P. Ortoleva
2004, Geophysical Journal International (156) 129-139
A data assimilation approach is demonstrated whereby seismic inversion is both automated and enhanced using a comprehensive numerical sedimentary basin simulator to study the physics and chemistry of sedimentary basin processes in response to geothermal gradient in much greater detail than previously attempted. The approach not only reduces costs by...
Manatees as sentinels of marine ecosystem health: are they the 2000-pound canaries?
R. K. Bonde, A.A. Aguirre, J. Powell
2004, EcoHealth (1) 255-262
The order Sirenia is represented by three species of manatees and one species of dugong distributed in tropical and subtropical regions of the world and considered vulnerable to extinction. The sentinel species concept is useful to identify indicators of the environment and may reflect the quality of health in marine...
Sulfur and oxygen isotopes in barite deposits of the western Brooks Range, Alaska, and implications for the origin of the Red Dog massive sulfide deposits
C. A. Johnson, K.D. Kelley, D. L. Leach
2004, Economic Geology (99) 1435-1448
Sulfur and oxygen isotope analyses have been obtained for barite samples from the giant stratiform sulfide barite deposits at Red Dog in the western Brooks Range of Alaska, from stratiform barite deposits elsewhere in the Red Dog district, and from stratiform and vein and breccia barite occurrences in the central...
The effectiveness of a barrier wall and underpasses in reducing wildlife mortality on a heavily traveled highway in Florida
C.K. Dodd Jr., W.J. Barichivich, L. L. Smith
2004, Biological Conservation (118) 619-631
Because of high numbers of animals killed on Paynes Prairie State Preserve, Alachua County, Florida, the Florida Department of Transportation constructed a barrier wall-culvert system to reduce wildlife mortality yet allow for passage of some animals across the highway. During a one year study following construction, we counted only 158...
Hawaiian submarine manganese-iron oxide crusts - A dating tool?
J.G. Moore, D.A. Clague
2004, Geological Society of America Bulletin (116) 337-347
Black manganese-iron oxide crusts form on most exposed rock on the ocean floor. Such crusts are well developed on the steep lava slopes of the Hawaiian Ridge and have been sampled during dredging and submersible dives. The crusts also occur on fragments detached from bedrock...
Species boundaries, phylogeography, and conservation genetics of the red-legged frog (Rana aurora/draytonii) complex
H. Bradley Shaffer, Gary M. Fellers, S. Randal Voss, J. C. Oliver, Gregory B. Pauly
2004, Molecular Ecology (13) 2667-2677
The red-legged frog, Rana aurora, has been recognized as both a single, polytypic species and as two distinct species since its original description 150 years ago. It is currently recognized as one species with two geographically contiguous subspecies, aurora and draytonii; the latter is protected under the US Endangered Species Act....
Application of deterministic deconvolution of ground-penetrating radar data in a study of carbonate strata
J. Xia, E. K. Franseen, R. D. Miller, T.V. Weis
2004, Journal of Applied Geophysics (56) 213-229
We successfully applied deterministic deconvolution to real ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data by using the source wavelet that was generated in and transmitted through air as the operator. The GPR data were collected with 400-MHz antennas on a bench adjacent to a cleanly exposed quarry face. The quarry site is characterized...
A simple technique for trapping Siren lacertian, Amphiuma means, and other aquatic vertebrates
S. A. Johnson, W.J. Barichivich
2004, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (19) 263-269
We describe a commercially-available funnel trap for sampling aquatic vertebrates. The traps can be used in heavily vegetated wetlands and can be set in water up to 60 cm deep without concern for drowning the animals. They were especially useful for capturing the aquatic salamanders Siren lacertina and Amphiuma means, which have been...
Sex differences in Little Auk Alle alle parental care: Transition from biparental to paternal-only care
A.M.A. Harding, Thomas I. van Pelt, J.T. Lifjeld, F. Mehlum
2004, Ibis (146) 642-651
Understanding differences in male and female care in biparental care systems can help interpret the selective pressures that shape parental strategies. We examined Little Auk Alle alle parental care at a breeding colony during the chick-rearing and fledging periods by conducting observations on marked, known-sex pairs, and by examining the...
Carbon, sulfur, and mercury - A biogeochemical axis of evil
George R. Aiken
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2004 CALFED Science Conference
I welcome this opportunity to come and preach the gospel according to Aiken, which is that to really understand ecosystems we need to pay much more attention to reactions involving natural organic matter. It's taken me many years to convince my colleagues of the important role of dissolved organic matter...
Global land ice measurements from space (GLIMS): remote sensing and GIS investigations of the Earth's cryosphere
Michael P. Bishop, Jeffrey A. Olsenholler, John F. Shroder, Roger G. Barry, Bruce H. Rasup, Andrew B. G. Bush, Luke Copland, John L. Dwyer, Andrew G. Fountain, Wilfried Haeberli, Andreas Kaab, Frank Paul, Dorothy K. Hall, Jeffrey S. Kargel, Bruce F. Molnia, Dennis C. Trabant, Rick L. Wessels
2004, Geocarto International (19) 57-84
Concerns over greenhouse‐gas forcing and global temperatures have initiated research into understanding climate forcing and associated Earth‐system responses. A significant component is the Earth's cryosphere, as glacier‐related, feedback mechanisms govern atmospheric, hydrospheric and lithospheric response. Predicting the human and natural dimensions of climate‐induced environmental change requires global, regional and local...
The importance of wood in headwater streams of the Oregon Coast Range
Christine May, Robert E. Gresswell, Janet L. Erickson
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3055
Although headwater streams comprise the majority of stream length in mountainous regions, little is known about their form and function in comparison to higher-order rivers. A better understanding of the role of headwater streams in routing water, wood, and sediment is needed to clarify the physical and biological connections among...
Regional analysis of spiculite faunas in the permian phosphoria basin: Implications for paleoceanography
Benita L. Murchey
2004, Handbook of Exploration and Environmental Geochemistry (8) 111-135
The sponge spiculites of the Permian Phosphoria basin, Antler high, and eastern Havallah basin were the southernmost expression of one of the largest spiculite belts in the Earth's history. This spiculite belt extended from Nevada to the Barents Sea. In Idaho and Nevada, the spicule populations of this belt are...